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]'''UNC-TV''' is a network of ] member stations in ], with headquarters in ]. The station takes its name from the ] and is owned by the UNC Center for Public Television. |
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'''UNC-TV''' is a network of ] member stations in ], with headquarters in ]. The station takes its name from the ] and is owned by the UNC Center for Public Television. |
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The network creates many programs of local interest, including the ] '']'', the interview series '']'' (hosted by former UNC president ]), and special programs about the state's ] and ] (often seen during the network's annual pledge drive). It also creates two programs for national distribution ('']'' and '']''). |
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The network creates many programs of local interest, including the ] '']'', the interview series '']'' (hosted by former UNC president ]), and special programs about the state's ] and ] (often seen during the network's annual pledge drive). It also creates two programs for national distribution ('']'' and '']''). |
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It owns 11 transmitters that broadcast across the entire state, as well as into parts of ] and ], and four digital channels: '''UNC-KD''' (children's programs), '''UNC-HD''' (high-definition programming), '''UNC-NC''' (North Carolina public affairs and original local productions), and '''UNC-ED''' (educational television). |
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It owns 11 transmitters that broadcast across the entire state, as well as into parts of ] and ], and four digital channels: '''UNC-KD''' (children's programs), '''UNC-HD''' (high-definition programming), '''UNC-NC''' (North Carolina public affairs and original local productions), and '''UNC-ED''' (educational television). |
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WUNC-TV in Chapel Hill, the network's flagship station, signed on in ] as the first educational television station south of ] Matching funds allowed for the construction of a new station in Columbia in ], and six more stations came onair between ] and ]. In the next 15 years, three more stations signed on, and a system of ] in the mountains allowed the network to reach across the entire state. |
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WUNC-TV in Chapel Hill, the network's flagship station, signed on in ] as the first educational television station south of ] Matching funds allowed for the construction of a new station in Columbia in ], and six more stations came on air between ] and ]. In the next 15 years, three more stations signed on, and a system of ] in the mountains allowed the network to reach across the entire state. |
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==Transmitters== |
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==Transmitters== |
It owns 11 transmitters that broadcast across the entire state, as well as into parts of Virginia and South Carolina, and four digital channels: UNC-KD (children's programs), UNC-HD (high-definition programming), UNC-NC (North Carolina public affairs and original local productions), and UNC-ED (educational television).